Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Memories of the 1982 Jack Kerouac Conference by Gerald Nicosia — Part 1 of 2

EDITORIAL FOREWORD: This is a guest post by my friend, Gerry Nicosia, author of Memory Babe: A Critical Biography of Jack Kerouac. This is Part 1 of 2, with Part 2 to follow tomorrow. 



Memories of the On the Road 25-year anniversary conference at the Naropa Institute,
Boulder, Colorado, July 23-August 1, 1982

Part 1 of 2

by Gerald Nicosia


Group photo of the speakers at the 1982 On the Road 25-year-anniversary Kerouac conference. Photo by Lance Gurwell, courtesy of Gerald Nicosia. See 12/27/16 Daily Beat post for key. Click here to buy an original from the photographer.


Recently I was in Tacoma, Washington, visiting with my friend Joe Lee, an avid Kerouac

collector, and he handed me a photograph I’d been waiting almost 35 years to see: the group

photo taken of all the speakers at the On the Road 25-year anniversary conference at the

Naropa Institute in Boulder in 1982. I remember very well when it was taken. It was the closing

session on the last day of the conference, and we were all gathered in Fairview High School,

since Allen Ginsberg wanted us each to give an “oracle”—a prophecy of what the writings of

Kerouac would lead to in another 50 or 100 years.*

          I said, “What Kerouac teaches is that we’re all brothers and sisters, that you can travel

anywhere on this planet and you will be taken care of. The knowledge that we’re all brothers

and sisters is eventually going to spread all over this planet; it will bring an end to wars and

people hurting one another; and Jack Kerouac will be a very large part of that.”

          I was amazed to see even Allen applauding as I came off the stage. He came up to me

and kissed me on the lips—it was the only way he ever kissed people—and said goodbye and

thanked me for coming. A number of other people congratulated me on this “parting

shot”—and then we were all encouraged to gather in an adjoining room for the group photo.

Jan Kerouac reading from her mother Joan Haverty's memoir, "Nobody's Wife" (still unpublished), at the Women's panel, On the Road conference, Boulder, July 1982.  Photo by Gerald Nicosia.


          Jan Kerouac was at the oracle—I don’t remember what she prophesied—but she didn’t

stick around for the group photo. She was already running around with the “Buddhist plumber”

who would become her steady boyfriend for the next couple of years. I think Kesey and Babbs

may have left early too, on their way home to Oregon. But a surprising number of people

stayed for the photo—several different photographers snapped the group—and more than one

photographer promised to send me a copy. But until Joe Lee handed me that photo by Lance

Gurwell in the Spar restaurant down on the old Tacoma waterfront in October 2016, I had

never seen a single copy of it.

          I should add that, in a way, there was nothing unusual about this. That conference was

the first taste a lot of us had of fame—of people snapping our photographs everywhere we

went. Something like 2000 people showed up over the course of ten days and nights, and there

were media not just from the U.S. but from numerous other countries, even Japan. The first

time I was ever interviewed for National Public Radio (by Connie Goldman) was at that

conference. I never saw most of the photos or even the articles that resulted. But over the

years, the value of that one particular photo, to me, kept increasing steadily.

          Although I’m writing this piece to share some of my memories of that fantastic

conference, there is something that needs to be said here at the start. And that is, that over

the course of the past 25 years or so, there has been a massive rewriting of Beat and Kerouac

history—and a lot of that rewriting has originated with one man, John Sampas, who was not at

the 1982 conference, but who now claims a large share of the credit for the revival in

recognition of Jack Kerouac’s work. The fact is, that the 1982 Naropa conference marked a

watershed in the recognition of Jack Kerouac as an important 20th-century American writer. I

was on four key panels at that conference, including the biography panel and the Catholicism

and Buddhism panel. But John Sampas has had a vested interest in making me disappear from

the annals of Kerouac scholarship, and such is the power and pervasiveness of his influence that

in many respects he has been successful. Fortunately, he never got to Lance Gurwell’s

negatives.

          Brian Hassett has written a remarkably detailed book about the 1982 On the Road

conference, The Hitchhiker's Guide to Jack Kerouac, which he kindly gave me a copy of when I

was in Lowell this past October (just before going to Tacoma). The truth is, I have enough

memories of that conference to fill my own book. Obviously I have neither the time nor the

space here to write that book, so it will have to suffice for me to give a sort of impressionistic

pastiche of what I saw and heard there.

          At the risk of seeming too self-obsessed, I feel the need to talk a little about my

circumstances before coming to the conference, because the situation I was in at the time had

a lot to do with how I perceived these people and events.

          For two years, 1979-1981, I had shared the rental of a house in San Francisco’s Sunset

District with my mother Sylvia Nicosia; but in 1981, she had decided to return to Chicago, and I

was left to fend for myself in San Francisco. This was at a time when the rents and other costs

of living in the Bay Area were just beginning their 30-year skyrocket, and I was having my own

career problems. First City Lights cancelled my contract for Memory Babe, and then Harper &

Row cancelled my contract for Memory Babe. Finally, thanks to the good will of Seymour Krim,

I got a third contract for the book at Grove Press. But things did not go smoothly there either.

A number of people threatened to sue to stop publication of the book, and then the putative

copyeditor Hettie Jones undertook to rewrite the book, and it took me almost a year to get her

rewriting undone before I could allow the book to go to press.

          During that period, I had to give up my new apartment in San Francisco, and I ended up

in my mom’s new rented house in LaGrange Park, Illinois. Whether any of these mishaps had

anything to do with my health, I’ll never know; but the summer of 1982, when I was invited by

Allen Ginsberg to take part in the coming great Naropa Kerouac conference, I was having

terrible heart fibrillations—the kind I never had before or, thankfully, since.

       
Gerald Nicosia and Edie Parker Kerouac, On the Road conference, Boulder, July 1982.  Photographer unknown.

          I also lacked money to get from Chicago to Boulder. But that summer, Edie Parker,

Jack's first wife, and I had become pretty good friends—I'd even visited her a couple of times in

Grosse Pointe, which was only half a day's drive from Chicago and even easier to reach by

train. My car was currently being borrowed by my friend, the poet Janet Cannon, to haul her

belongings from Taos, New Mexico, to her new home in the Bay Area. But Edie had a car,

wanted to go to the Naropa conference, and needed someone to help her drive there. We

made a deal—she would drive from Detroit to Chicago, pick me up, and I would drive the rest of

the way to Boulder.

          Among the accomplishments I'm most proud of—though it's not on any of my resumes—

is having traveled "on the road" halfway across the country in a big Motown gas guzzler (she

wouldn't drive any other kind) with Jack Kerouac's ex-wife! I met all of Jack Kerouac's wives,

and a whole lot of his girlfriends, but the only one who was unequivocally "hell for leather"—in

the words of Lucien Carr—was Edie Parker. Edie was not the brightest intellectually—by a long

shot—but she was certainly the most spontaneous and the most fun. She would do anything

anyone suggested if it tickled her fancy or seemed like a surefire kick. She also had a sailor's

mouth and would say exactly what was on her mind—which was something a workingclass guy

like myself could not help but admire and feel comfortable with. When I read The Sea Is My

Brother, the character of Polly was a dead ringer for her.

          If you wonder what we talked about for over a thousand miles, that's easy—her love of

Jack Kerouac and her current love life. She claimed that Jack was the only "soul mate"

she had ever had—though she had several later husbands, who married her for her money, she

claimed, and then all left her when they discovered her money had been carefully tied up in trust

funds by her family. She currently had a lover called Muggsy, more than thirty years her junior, and

she worried endlessly about whether she were betraying her love for Jack by getting involved

with him. Muggsy was an aspiring poet, and Edie was helping him out, paying to publish his

work, and so forth. They fought a lot, and she obsessed over their arguments. I tried to be

supportive, though the samples of his work she showed me were not inspiring. He had not

wanted her to make this trip to Naropa, and had warned her that she would be "crucified in a

war of egos" there. For all I know, Muggsy thought I was some kind of romantic rival trying to

beat him out.

          If you're getting a sense that Edie was a bit ditzy, or more than a bit, you're getting

a just impression. But ditzy in a fun way. She was full of life—the way I suppose Jack Kerouac was

when she met him—and there was never a dull moment with her. I'd trade her company for

almost anyone I know today—except maybe my kids, but that's just fatherly prejudice.

          We stopped in Lincoln, Nebraska, for the night and had dinner at a fancy steakhouse.

She picked up the tab. I remember she drank several beers—didn't really get drunk, just a little

gayer and more vivacious (no wonder Jack loved her!). Because of my ongoing health

problems, I only drank one beer, and she called me a "cheap date."

          Then, thinking about saving money, I asked if we could share a motel room. Her eyes lit

up for a moment, and she said that if we shared the same room, we'd have sex. It wasn't a

come-on; it wasn't a threat, or even a warning. It was just matter-of-fact. If I took one big

lesson away from the Beats, it was how matter-of-factly they treated the sex act. It was just

something you did when the urge struck you, or if it was convenient, or if you had a need. She

asked me, "Is that what you want?"

          I quickly told her, "No," and she told me she'd pay for a separate room for me. Besides

all those health problems, I was still very much, psychologically, the "good Catholic boy from

the Midwest," and jumping into bed with a woman 27 years older than myself, no matter how

vivacious, was not yet in my sexual vocabulary.

          When we got to Boulder, Edie stayed at a nice hotel—it might have been the

Boulderado. One of her close friends was Jeanne Milner, the heir of a hotel chain; and wherever

Edie traveled, Milner found her a luxurious place to crash. In any case, we did have a big

celebratory supper at the Boulderado. The Boulderado was a gold-rush hotel, the height of

luxury in its day, with lovely dark-wood paneling and an enormous stained-glass ceiling. As

usual, Edie was paying, and we both had steaks, and this time she added a bottle of Korbel's

champagne. It was a hilarious dinner, as I remember, because there was some kind of radio

gizmo in our booth, and its red light would start blinking at random moments. Edie

immediately declared it was Jack speaking to her. "He's yelling at me for drinking too much,"

she laughed. And then, strangely, whenever she mentioned Muggsy's name, the light seemed

to start blinking again. "He's warning me not to get hurt by Muggsy," she said, this time more

seriously.

----------------To be continued tomorrow----------------


*FOOTNOTE:
I realize that my memory of where and when the photo was taken differs from that of Brian Hassettalthough it's possible there was more than one shooting of group photos.  I have great respect for Brian's detailed records of the conference, especially as he put all his notes together in a coherent and very enlightening narrative in his book The Hitchhiker's Guide to Jack Kerouac.  Brian says the photo was taken "Sat night, July 25th, 1982, in the press room just off the Glenn Miller Ballroom."  He may be right about the place where it was taken; but July 25th, 1982, was a Sunday, not a Saturday. There are further problems with his scenario, which is why I have kept my version herewhich was written before I read Brian's version.  I also freely admit there are doubtless problems with my scenariosince we're all dealing with the fallible memories of aging Beatsters looking back on an event that happened more than 34 years ago!  Maybe if Lance Gurwell still has his notes to this particular shooting, we'll finally know for sure.  Two things trouble me about Brian's version.  Regina Weinreich was  not invited to the conferenceshe was still in an early stage of working on her book in 1982.  She was not yet known to the Beat community.  Regina asked me to introduce her to the audience when I was on stage at the biographers' panel, which took place on Monday July 26and I did introduce her, and told the audience that she was working on a book about Jack.  From that point on, she was known to many people and included in more of the activities. I don't remember whether they actually gave her a chance to speak.  But I don't know why she would have been included in the group photo on July 25, while she was still largely unknown as someone working on Kerouac. Also, there are notable people missing from this group photo.  Edie Parker is not in it, and I don't know why she would be missing if the photo were taken on July 25.  Eventually Muggsy joined her at the conference, and they left a day or two early.  Kesey and Babbs are not in the picture, and I'm almost certain they arrived by Sunday night July 25and Jan Kerouac came with them, so they should all be in the picture if it were taken then.  I don't remember Kesey and Babbs at the oracle, so it may be they left early too, which would explain their not being in the photo if it were taken on Sunday, August 1, as I propose.  In any case, I'm open to hearing more argument on this subject.

2 comments:

Brian H said...

This is so fantastic! I wish you WOULD write a whole book on it, Gerry!

You definitely got Edie's number. I don't know about ditzy, but she was definitely fun as hell. Glad you captured that. It really pissed me off that she was portrayed as sort of a shrew in that error-filled "Kill Your Darlings."

I love this "there was never a dull moment with her. I'd trade her company for almost anyone I know today." That drive together must have been a hoot! Gawd!

And thanks for the shout-out on my book. Glad you like it. And super-glad you were there for that performance in Lowell this year.

Not that it really matters, but the group photo was definitely taken after the main performance on Sat July 24th. (I don't know why I was off by one numeral.) It sounds like from what you describe there was also a group photo taken the night of the final "Oracle" — which would make sense — but this wasn't it. For one thing, Leary left pretty much the next day, or Monday. I don't know if you remember this, but he was not well received there in Boulder. People were making fun of him, and he was never part of the core Beat crew, so he was sort of ostracized.

Kesey, Babbs & George Walker didn't arrive until Sunday night or Monday — that's why they're not in it. I didn't know Jan rode in with them. Cool. I'll have to ask George about that.

Then they left on the final Sunday afternoon (pre Oracle) after their Prankster "Awards Ceremony" in Chautauqua Park and drove to Yellowstone or Yosemite (can't remember which) on the way back to Oregon.

Anyway — the other main proof of the photo timing is that Abbie, Leary, Krassner and Allen are all present and all wearing exactly what they were wearing on stage for the "Political Fallout of the Beat Generation" panel they had all just been on on the main stage for the big Saturday night show.
(Burroughs always wore the same thing, so his attire doesn't tell you anything.)
There's lots of photos of the panel, and it's in some of the documentaries.

And at either the beginning or the end of the audio of the "Political Fallout" panel you can hear Allen make the announcement about the photo shoot to immediately follow — his thinking being, I assume, that pretty much everyone was "in the house" for the big Saturday night show.

But mainly I really hope you keep writing as much as the flow allows on this. I love the car trip / hotel / restaurant type personal stories. That's the fun stuff that really illuminates the personalities of this funny, rambunctious, riotous raft of odd ducks.

Write on!




Rick Dale, author of The Beat Handbook said...

Below is a slightly expanded riff on the above that Brian left on the Jack Kerouac Facebook page....Rick Dale

Here's the comment (slightly more riffed :-D ) that I just left on Rick's excellent blog . . .

This is so fantastic! I wish you WOULD write a whole book on it, Gerald! :-)

You've definitely got Edie's number. I don't know about ditzy, but she was sure fun as hell. Glad you captured that. It really pissed me off that she was portrayed as sort of a shrew in that that pretend Real Story "Kill Your Darlings."

I love the — "... there was never a dull moment with her. I'd trade her company for almost anyone I know today ..." I can still hear her in my head nattering on. Gawd she was a talker! That drive together musta been a hoot! :-D <3

And thanks for the shout-out on my book. Glad you liked it. And super-glad you were there for that performance in Lowell this year — and thanks too for your beaming post-show rave. :-)

Not that it really matters, but the group photo was definitely taken after the main performance on Sat July 24th. (I don't know why I was off by one numeral.) It sounds like from what you describe there was another group photo taken at the high school the night of the final "Oracle" — which would make sense (although I've never seen one anywhere) — but this wasn't that night. For one thing, Leary left pretty much the next day (Sunday the 25th), or Monday. I don't know if you remember this, but he was not well received there in Boulder. People were making fun of him, and he was never part of the core Beat crew, so he was sort of ostracized, and got the hell outta Dodge. (ch. 7)

And I betcha Edie's not in it cuz she's caught up holding court with some captive audience out in the main room. :-D just a wink-wink nudge-nudge knowin' Edie. :-)

Kesey, Babbs & George Walker didn't arrive until Sunday night or Monday — that's why they're not in it. I didn't know Jan rode in with them. Cool. I'll have to ask George about that.

Then they left on the final Sunday afternoon (pre evening Oracle) after their Prankster "Awards Ceremony" in Chautauqua Park (ch. 22) and drove, sans Jan, to Yellowstone or Yosemite (can't remember which ... George?) on the way back to Oregon.

Anyway — the other main proof of the photo timing is that Abbie, Leary, Krassner and Allen are all present and wearing exactly what they were wearing on stage for the big "Political Fallout of the Beat Generation" panel they'd just been on in the next door Glenn Miller Ballroom for the Saturday night show. (Burroughs always wore the same thing, so his attire doesn't tell you anything.)

There's lots of photos of the panel, and it's in some of the documentaries.
And this is taken in the press room / green room just off the main stage that you were prolly in many times and may have sat on that couch more than just this photo. :-)

At either the beginning or the end of the audio of the event you can hear Allen make an announcement about the photo shoot to immediately follow — his thinking being, I assume, that pretty much everyone was "in the house" for the big Saturday night show.

But mainly I really hope you keep writing as much as the flow allows on this. <3

I love the car trip / hotel / restaurant personal stories. That's the fun stuff that really illuminates the personalities of this funny, rambunctious, riotous raft of odd ducks.

Write on!